Keeping a Journal to Help Yourself Write Well
By Sheila Bender
As a writer, I often use my journal to play around with strategies I pick
up from other writers' work or with strategies I invent to get myself writing.
Playing around with the strategies, in combination with observing the "show
don't tell rule" (use imagery and detail that appeal to the senses rather
than general summarizing words), I find my journal writing becomes valuable
writing practice.
One of my favorite exercises is to play with sound in my writing. We are a
very visual culture and it is easy to neglect sound imagery in writing since
visual imagery comes more naturally to most of us. To force myself to get sound
into my writing, I think of a noisy place — like the street I used to live
on in Los Angeles on garbage collection day — and then set about describing
it in a journal entry with words that describe the sounds. Here's an example:
On garbage collection days, the disposal company my husband calls Loud and
Early slams and smashes its way into our sleep. We hear the sounds of garbage
cans colliding with the thick rusty truck, then scraping and clattering across
the asphalt and cement of street and curb. When we hear the garbage truck grind
the dregs of our existence to a pulp, we slide our feet to the floor. A police
helicopter hurls its hello from overhead, shaking the walls and shattering
any memory of our dreams.
When my writing includes sounds from my environment, I find myself more immersed
in the experience I am writing about and continue writing longer than I might
have without the sound imagery.
Smell is another underused sense in written work. I am fond of playing with
similes to help evoke smells. What I evoke leads to memories I will put on
the page with vivid detail. To start evoking smells, I think of something I
smell in my daily life and compare it to something else I remember smelling:
The smell of clothes fresh from the dyer is like the smell of bread baking
at my friend's house.
The smell of the charcoal grill after the fire has died down is like my girlfriend's
clothes after the fire in her apartment.
Smell of jasmine flowers as I walk by is the smell of my grandmother's dress
as I clung to the folds.
What I like about writing these similes is that I never know what leap of
association I'll make and what story I might launch myself into. The memory
of my grade school friend's apartment building burning down is vivid to me
as it comes back through my sense of smell, and I can continue a piece of writing
about that with memories of standing outside watching red flames coming out
of all the windows and standing with my friend and her mother feeling the heat
that the flames produced as we watched fire fighters dragging heavy hoses and
climbing onto the roof.
Just as forcing ourselves to write from our senses of hearing and smell can
produce topics and skillfully drawn description, relying on certain sentence
structures can help us be clever and entertaining. I am fond of copying fiction
writer Ron Carlson's sentence structure when I want to add wit to my writing.
He shared his style of journaling years ago as a contributor to my book The
Writer's Journal: 40 Contemporary Writers and Their Journals, and I've
been playing with his ideas ever since. He writes clever sentences and keeps
them around for "thickening the brew" when he fleshes out stories.
Here's one of his sentences:
They discovered that the elevator in their dilapidated building acted as
a bellows for the air conditioning, so they sent the child out an hour every
afternoon to ride up and down."
When I used Ron Carlson's sentence as a pattern, I wrote this:
Because I discovered that my cats' scratching altered the upholstery on my
couches, I let them do a patch every day and then I came with darning needles
and embroidery paraphernalia and wove a beautiful array of colors into the
tatters. Now people all over the world order my cat-scratched upholstery.
I have invented the beginning of a story about the way the business changed
the "I's" life. I know I could also keep on using the sentence to
write about more discoveries until I evoked an interesting character who just
loves to put the world together in her own way.
The beauty of playing with these exercise ideas is that you can use them over
and over when you don't know quite what to say but know you'd like to be saying
it more skillfully and surprisingly! Using the strategies again and again,
you'll find that you begin to automatically incorporate more playful attitudes
into your writing and interest yourself more in putting your words on the page.
And you'll find you have spawned many opportunities for more writing. •
© 2005 Sheila Bender
About the Author
Sheila Bender is the author of eight writing books for Writer's Digest Books
and other presses and puts her knowledge and classroom-tested writing
exercises, discussion, and revision techniques to work for Writing It Real
subscribers and online students. Visit www.writingitreal.com to read sample
articles, browse previews of recent articles and learn about LifeJournal
for Writers software tool for building
an effective writer's journal.
12/08/05
|